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Comparing the Vive to the Rift

I’m a big Virtual Reality fan and have had the opportunity to try out many VR systems, including the two best ones currently on the market, the HTC Vive and the Oculus Rift. Here’s my review:

tl;dr: They’re both great and deliver a compelling experience far ahead of everyone else. Graphics are strong on both devices, the Rift has better sound and ergonomics, the Vive has better tracking and controllers. In the end, the Vive is slightly more exciting because tracking your body’s motion is the key to VR, but you can’t go wrong with either device.

Visuals: The graphics are very similar between the two devices and really impressive, definitely good enough to feel immersed and present. Resolution and field of view seem virtually identical on both, the Vive is a little brighter and the Rift a little sharper. Both have a pretty tight “sweet spot” (they have to be in just the right spot in front of your eyes or things get blurry in a hurry).

Sound: The Rift really shines here. The ergonomics and quality of the Rift headphones are great while they’re an afterthought on the Vive. The externalization and positioning of the 3D audio is quite good on the Rift and just basic on the Vive.

Comfort: This area is pretty close, with an advantage to the Rift. I’d say both devices are workable. They’re about the same weight, just light enough to be OK to wear for a while, but still pretty clunky and they get a little too warm. The Rift feels more balanced, less front-heavy. The fit and finish is high on both and the materials are OK, though for my taste all that plastic is too noticeable for something that’s strapped to my head. The large cables connecting the headsets to the PC are tolerable because the whole thing is such a cool experience, but clearly something that would be great to improve or remove altogether because they cause occasional brushing up or tripping which ruins the virtual experience.

Tracking: The Vive shines here. Once the two motion trackers are set up, they work pretty seamlessly. Your head and hand motions are tracked smoothly and accurately from all directions so you can turn and move around freely. It rarely glitches and after a while you stop thinking about it and it just works. The Rift tracking is also strong but suffers in comparison to the Vive because it only tracks from one direction, so you can’t move as freely and end up more aware of the limited range inside which the VR experience will work.

Controllers: This is another area where the Vive shines. It comes with two tracked hand controllers that make VR fun to interact with. You can “see your hands” in the virtual worlds and grab things, push buttons, aim guns, etc. These trackers are a good first step towards interaction in VR and make it easier to leave keyboards, mice, and touchscreens behind. The Rift will catch up when they have hand trackers later this year, but for now it ships with a little remote and an XBox controller. Neither is tracked (they don’t show up in the virtual world) so they’re just a stop gap solution.

Software: The Vive out-of-the-box experience (The Lab) is great, the Rift one (Dream Deck) is pretty good too. I’ve had the Vive longer, so I’ve tried more content on it. I’ve found several amazing titles on both systems and feel like there’s going to be lots of great content coming for years. Downloading and installing giant desktop apps is a pain and feels like something out of the past. Hopefully WebVR will take off and we’ll get more content that’s “web like” – easy to surf in connected, quick-to-load chunks.

Conclusion: Get a Vive or a Rift now and be amazed at how much fun VR is. I like the Vive a little better because of the better tracking, but the Rift is pretty much just as good, and both are far better than anything else I’ve tried. Future devices will improve – bigger fields of view, lighter and more portable designs, higher resolution graphics, great 3D sound, solutions for eye tracking and accommodation – but for now, both of these devices are good enough to deliver a great VR experience to millions of people. This is the beginning of something big.

Great review and comparison, guys! I was sold on PSVR (and probably still will get one), but I tried the Vive this weekend in Bellevue, and I am sold on it! Everything worked FLAWLESSLY, and the limited experiences I tried were MORE than enough to convince me that this is the “real deal”! I am completely turned off and will avoid the Rift simply because they went back on their word and are hellbent on making Oculus a “walled garden” with their new hardware checking DRM! Screw that. The LAST thing VR needs at this point is this type of approach! I plan on adding my own headphones to the Vive, and them NOT including mediocre cans is a plus to me, not a minus…I can find better headphones than what would be included with the Rift.

Regarding the weight of the devices, I disagree. The Rift is MUCH lighter than the Vive. Just try propping up both units on your forehead to get a “real world” view for a moment and you’ll find the Vive can’t even stay on your forehead because it’s too heavy. The Vive is also bigger and clunkier.

The Vive does indeed have much better controllers and in-VR pointing abilities (pretty amazing, actually), but the setup and number of parts is out of control. The box it comes in is twice the size of the Rift box, just to accommodate the vast array of tiny parts and cords. It’s ridiculous.

The Rift only has a single cord leading from the headset to the PC, whereas the Vive has three cords molded together. That makes a big difference as far as becoming tangled and clumsy as you’re doing your VR thing.

If you’re going to do most of your VR sitting at a desk, absolutely go with the Rift, as there is no comparison. If you’re going to move around the room, I guess you should go with the Vive, although the Rift will add a second tracking station and controllers soon, so ultimately it will probably be better in both situations.

The Vive is a great product, the first I use to show people VR right now. But once the Oculus Rift Touch controllers launch later this year they have pretty much got Vive beat by your own estimation.

The Rift at that point has better ergonomics, sound, controllers, easier to use and perhaps most importantly many more titles available (plus the Rift runs everything on Steam anyway). I’m still using Vive for demos for months though.